Gran’s face darkens. ‘Victor wasn’t happy. Oh, no, he wasn’t happy at all.’
Victor? I’d never heard her mention a Victor before. She told me my granddad had been called William, not that she ever spoke about him. Even Mum didn’t know much. But I don’t want to interrupt Gran’s flow by asking questions so I stay silent.
‘He wanted to hurt the baby,’ she says, her face crumpling.
‘Well, Tom would never do anything to hurt the baby. Tom is a nice man. You love Tom, remember?’
Her expression changes again. ‘Oh, yes. Tom is lovely. Tom likes his fried breakfasts.’
I smile. Gran always made Tom a full English every time we stayed. ‘That’s right.’
How am I going to bring up the subject of the remains of two dead people in the garden? Should I even bring it up? Maybe it’s best to leave it for now. But then I think of the police who will need to interview her at some point knowing she owned the cottage for so many years, even if she did have tenants. If I’ve already told her about it, it will be less of a shock when the police speak to her.
‘And … we love living in Skelton Place,’ I begin tentatively.
Her face clouds over. ‘Skelton Place?’
‘The cottage, Gran. Beggars Nook?’
‘You’re living in the cottage at Skelton Place?’
‘Yes. Mum wanted to stay in Spain. You know what she’s like. She loves the sun. So Tom and I are living there. And it’s so generous of you …’ I’ve told her all this before, of course.
Gran starts moving the pieces of the puzzle around aimlessly again and I’m afraid I’ve lost her. I have to say something now, quickly, before she retreats back into herself.
‘And the weird thing is … we started digging up the garden to build an extension and we found two bodies …’
Gran’s head shoots up. ‘Bodies?’
‘Yes, Gran. Buried in the garden.’
‘Dead bodies?’
‘Um … Yes.’ Is there any other kind?
‘At Skelton Place?’
I nod encouragingly. ‘A woman and a man.’
Gran stares at me for such a long time that I’m afraid she’s gone into some sort of catatonic state. But then her eyes mist over as though she’s remembering. She suddenly grabs hold of my hands again, disrupting the pieces of the jigsaw puzzle so that some of them fall to the floor. ‘Is it Sheila?’ she whispers.
Sheila? ‘Who’s Sheila, Gran?’
Gran snatches her hands away, a film of confusion over her eyes, like cataracts. She looks like a frightened child as she shrinks further into her seat. ‘Such a wicked little girl. That’s what they all said. A wicked little girl.’
‘Who? Who’s a wicked little girl?’
‘That’s what they all said.’
I need to change the subject. Gran is getting agitated. I lean over and pick up the pieces of jigsaw from the carpet.
‘The gardens here are lovely,’ I say, when I straighten up, looking past Gran and out of the window. ‘Are you still able to get out there every day?’ Gran’s mind might be going but there is nothing wrong with her physically.
But Gran is still mumbling about Sheila and a wicked little girl.
I reach across the table and take Gran’s gnarled hand tightly between mine. ‘Gran. Who is Sheila?’
Gran stops her mumbling and looks directly at me, her eyes focusing. ‘I don’t … know …’